论文标题
银河黑社会:紧凑型残余物的空间分布
The Galactic Underworld: The spatial distribution of compact remnants
论文作者
论文摘要
我们绘制了中子星和黑洞的预期银河分布。这些死星的紧凑型残余物(银河黑社会)与可见星系具有根本不同的分布和结构。与可见的银河系相比,浓度浓度较薄,较薄的磁盘结构的浓度要少得多,而尺度高于1260 +-30 pc的尺度高于三倍。这种差异来自两个主要原因。首先,该分布部分是从星系本身不断发展的结构的整合(以及父恒星的变化分布)继承的。其次,造成了更大的效果,这是由于残留物在超新星出生时收到的出生踢而产生的。由于这一踢脚,我们发现30%的残留物具有足够的动能,可以完全避免银河恒星(40%的中子星和2%的黑洞),导致银河系的巨大质量损失占银河系恒星质量的〜0.4%。黑洞 - 中子星的分数在银河系中心附近增加:前者较小的踢速度的结果(假设是踢速度与质量成反比)。我们的模拟残留分布分别与最接近的中子星和黑洞的可能距离分别为19个PC和21 pc,而我们最近的可能的磁性则为4.2 kpc。尽管黑社会仅包含约1%的星系质量,但其人口的观察性特征和物理痕迹(例如微透镜)将越来越多地存在于从引力波检测器到高精度调查的数据中,诸如GAIA等太空任务。
We chart the expected Galactic distribution of neutron stars and black holes. These compact remnants of dead stars -- the Galactic underworld -- are found to exhibit a fundamentally different distribution and structure to the visible Galaxy. Compared to the visible Galaxy, concentration into a thin flattened disk structure is much less evident with the scale height more than tripling to 1260 +- 30 pc. This difference arises from two primary causes. Firstly, the distribution is in part inherited from the integration over the evolving structure of the Galaxy itself (and hence the changing distribution of the parent stars). Secondly, an even larger effect arises from the natal kick received by the remnant at the event of its supernova birth. Due to this kick we find 30% of remnants have sufficient kinetic energy to entirely escape the Galactic potential (40% of neutron stars and 2% of black holes) leading to a Galactic mass loss integrated to the present day of ~ 0.4% of the stellar mass of the Galaxy. The black hole -- neutron star fraction increases near the Galactic centre: a consequence of smaller kick velocities in the former (the assumption made is that kick velocity is inversely proportional to mass). Our simulated remnant distribution yields probable distances of 19 pc and 21 pc to the nearest neutron star and black hole respectively, while our nearest probable magnetar lies at 4.2 kpc. Although the underworld only contains of order ~ 1% of the Galaxy's mass, observational signatures and physical traces of its population, such as microlensing, will become increasingly present in data ranging from gravitational wave detectors to high precision surveys from space missions such as Gaia.